PRCRGTOCAug 15, 2020

Nash equilibrium structure of Cox process Hotelling games

arXiv:2008.06617v1
Originality Incremental advance
AI Analysis

This work addresses a theoretical problem in game theory and stochastic geometry, providing incremental insights into equilibrium structures in competitive scenarios.

The paper tackles the existence and uniqueness of Nash equilibria in a Cox process Hotelling game, proving that when equilibria exist, they are unique and consist of pure strategies with proportional intensities.

We study an N-player game where a pure action of each player is to select a non-negative function on a Polish space supporting a finite diffuse measure, subject to a finite constraint on the integral of the function. This function is used to define the intensity of a Poisson point process on the Polish space. The processes are independent over the players, and the value to a player is the measure of the union of its open Voronoi cells in the superposition point process. Under randomized strategies, the process of points of a player is thus a Cox process, and the nature of competition between the players is akin to that in Hotelling competition games. We characterize when such a game admits Nash equilibria and prove that when a Nash equilibrium exists, it is unique and comprised of pure strategies that are proportional in the same proportions as the total intensities. We give examples of such games where Nash equilibria do not exist. A better understanding of the criterion for the existence of Nash equilibria remains an intriguing open problem.

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